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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023





  • VelociCatTurdtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDynamic DNS vs Dedicated VPN IPEnglish
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    5 months ago
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    5 months ago
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    If you really think someone is wrong don’t ask them “why, why, why” incessantly like a toddler, grow a pair of balls and just speak your mind.

    And in this case I meant “your IP as in, the grand scheme of things “an IP address that you own”, a VPS for instance, not necessarily the destination. Obviously you wouldn’t need to tell a firewall what its own public IP is. Have I clarified my thought to your standards?


  • VelociCatTurdtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDynamic DNS vs Dedicated VPN IPEnglish
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    No fucking shit? In that scenario your friend could use DDNS and you point your access rule to his FQDN to allow access.

    Did you really ask me a billion fucking “why” questions just to come back and fucking what prove me wrong? Is this a good use of your time? I literally thought you were a noobie looking to understand.

    Fuck off.




  • VelociCatTurdtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDynamic DNS vs Dedicated VPN IPEnglish
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    Because you’re not going to setup any rules pointed to a dynamic public IP address. Otherwise you’re going to be finding a way to change the rule every time the ip changes.

    The ddns automatically updates an A record with your public IP address any time it changes, so yeah the rules would use the fqdn for that A record.



  • VelociCatTurdtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDynamic DNS vs Dedicated VPN IPEnglish
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    As long as whatever firewall rules you’re using is capable of resolving FQDNs then I don’t see an advantage of doing this. Maybe in the off chance that your IP changes, someone else gets the old IP and exploits it before the DDNS setup has a chance to update. I think that’s really unlikely.

    Edit: just to add to this, I do think static IPs are preferable to DDNS, just because it’s easier, but they also typically cost money.





  • So here’s my two cents:

    I think that if you have a bunch of services, then you should use caddy or Apache or nginx. doing this in caddy and Apache is not that difficult, but I understand the hesitation (I don’t have much experience with nginx)

    If you just want to get something working you could do bookmarks with the http://host.whatever.com:port and that would be Gucci.

    You could also use another registrar or name server besides Cloudflare to make URL redirect records. This is like an A record but it also includes a port. This is not a standard type of record, but some places will do it like Namecheap.

    Again, if you want to do it the right and best way, then I do think a reverse proxy is the way to go.





  • VelociCatTurdtoSelfhosted@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*English
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    6 months ago
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    It’s at /app/public/conf.yml within the container. But I suppose you’re asking how you would pull it out? I’d probably just get into the container interactively and just copy the contents of that file. I would suggest using volumes in the future for persistent data.